Oath to the People’s Commissar
Words by Vissarion Sayanov /1941
Song of the Guards’ Division
Words by Lev Rakhmilevich /1941
The Invincible Red Army
(co-authored by Aram Khachaturian)
Words by Mikhail Golodny /1943
To the Health of Our Motherland
Words by Iosif Utkin /1944
The Black Sea
Words by Sergey Alymov and Nikita Verkhovsky /1944
The exact date the song was written is unknown. Its first performance most likely took place in a series of concerts called “Sea Soul”, conducted by the Central Red Navy Song and Dance Ensemble (artistic director—Vano Muradeli) under the baton of Semen Gerchikov in the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall on 25, 29, 30, 31 July and 1, 2 August 1943. Two versions of the song have survived—the score for piano and bass entitled “The Black Sea” and the score for symphony orchestra and male choir entitled “The Black Sea Song”. The song was first published in the collection Songs of the Navy in 1944 (Issue 1, Moscow, 1944). Later it was included in Shostakovich’s Collected Works (Vol. 34).
Our Song
Words by Konstantin Simonov /1950
Konstantin Simonov’s poem was published in August 1949 during the time the First All-Union Conference of the Partisans of Peace was underway in Moscow, in which Shostakovich and Simonov participated as members of the presidium. The exact date the song was composed is unknown. It was most likely written between the end of August 1949 and 14 January 1950 (the date of the first sheet music edition of the song signed by Muzgiz). The first edition of the song was published in Moscow in 1950, after which it appeared in numerous collections of songs and arrangements, as well as in Shostakovich’s Collected Works (Vol. 34).
March of the Peace Supporters
Words by Konstantin Simonov /1950
Long Live the Army of Our Nation
(co-authored by Aram Khachaturian)
Words by Sergey Mikhalkov /1951
[Glory to Our Soviet Nation]
Words by Mikhail Issakovsky /1956
October Dawn
(co-authored by Aram Khachaturian)
Words by Vladimir Kharitonov /1957
We Cherish the October Dawns in Our Hearts
Words by Valentin Sidorov /1957
We Sing Glory to Our Country
Words by Valentin Sidorov /1957
Glory to Our Communist Country
(co-authored by Valentin Makarov)
Words by Yakov Belinsky /1950